Paladino: Trump would ‘absolutely’ endorse him against Cuomo

Carl Paladino, one of the president-elect's major supporters in New York State, said Thursday that Donald Trump would "absolutely" endorse him if he runs for governor again in 2018. April 14, 2016 Photo Credit: Newsday / John Paraskevas

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ALBANY — Maverick Republican nominee for governor in 2010 Carl Paladino, just off a two-year stint as one of the President-elect Donald Trump’s longest and closest surrogates, said Thursday that Trump would “absolutely” endorse him if he runs for governor in 2018.

“We did talk about it at one point,” Paladino told Newsday. The Buffalo developer declined to discuss the private conversation with Trump.

Paladino, who has continued to regularly criticize Democratic Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, said Thursday that he hasn’t yet decided whether to seek the Republican nomination again, although he said Trump’s success fuels the fire.

“The frustration is up in upstate, in Nassau and Suffolk, and in the Hudson Valley,” Paladino said in an interview. “The frustration of the people is huge. They are tired of a governor who won’t give us fracking, but gives us five casinos to soak the last nickel out of poor people. It’s sickening.”

Other Republicans who have said they are interested in the 2018 race are Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino, who lost to Cuomo in 2014, and Dutchess County Executive Mark Molinaro.

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Paladino acknowledged that Tuesday’s results in the presidential race aren’t encouraging on the face of it: Democrat Hillary Clinton, a former senator for New York, won 57 percent to 36 percent over Trump, the Manhattan developer.

State Board of Elections results show Trump won in 46 of New York’s 62 counties, but as in Trump’s victory nationwide, his successes were mostly in rural counties without a city that dominates the electorate. Clinton won New York City overwhelmingly and eked out a 49 percent to 45 percent win in Paladino’s home county of Erie.

Astorino’s Westchester County went for Clinton, while Molinaro’s Dutchess County went for Trump.

Paladino, who has also served on the Buffalo city school board, said he has no timetable to decide on whether to run for governor again.

“I’ll think about it as time goes on, but I’m just a happy guy right now,” Paladino said. “It’s a feeling that you had a part in an enormous historical moment, and it makes you feel so good. I did my part for America and for the movement and that’s what it is: a political revolution. The entire Republican Party has been recast for the working man and that is the awesome part of it. The old boys’ network is gone.”